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Queens and logistics

As I harvest nurse bees and emerging brood to assemble cell builder colonies and populate mating nucs, I notice about a week and a half ago, that one colony had become queenless, with about six emergency queen cells. About one week ago I noticed that a virgin had emerged in this colony and I thought she had destroyed all of the sister queen cells. The virgin was now laying and I was just in time to see a new sister queen emerge from a cell the first virgin had apparently overlooked. I rescued her, caged her, and placed her with a newly formed colony in need of a queen.

Re: Queens and logistics

dixiebooks,

Unfortunately some virgins do begin laying, they get the moniker, "Drone-layer". I've had a few of those over the years. Fortunately, this time, like David LaFerney, said, I assume she mated early, since she isn't old enough to fit the scenario that usually goes with becoming a Drone-layer.

My guess is that since my activities in this colony effectively split the brood nest, and this solitary queen cell was almost on the opposite side of the super from all the other queen cells. There was a frame of nectar/pollen and an empty comb between this frame and the other frames containing brood and the majority of the queen cells. That could also be the explanation for this queen cell being so much younger, too.

Re: Queens and logistics

I have never seen a virgin lay. I have never seen a virgin who can't fly (damaged wings) start to lay. Queens who mate late lay nothing but drones. In my observation, (and Huber's) queens who never mate, never lay.

Re: Queens and logistics

MB, so Drone-layers are mated queens, but they mated after their biological clocks no longer allow matings to be successful. I had always thought they were virgins that never managed to mate. I had envisioned Drone-layers as virgin queens that were prevented from successfully mating during the period when mating, for them, were a biological imperative. That they outgrew the urge to perform mating flights, hence began laying without a reservoir of sperm.

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I can't explain it, but I once had a queen, she was doing a very good job, but one of her wings was shriveled up in such a way that it appeared to be that way from the time she emerged. Perhaps the wing had sustained damage sometime after she mated, but I lost track of her and never had the chance to examine her under magnification.

Re: Queens and logistics

As a prank a local person in the club found some virgins that didnt develope and didn't have wings. We took them to some who new how to do AI, and had them inseminated, then gave the queens to another beek. The queens started laying, and she noticed they didnt have wings, and flipped out a bit. It was all in good fun.

Re: Queens and logistics

>MB, so Drone-layers are mated queens, but they mated after their biological clocks no longer allow matings to be successful.

That is what Huber says and what is consistent with my experience. It does not seem to be the commonly held view, but I've never seen a queen who can't fly start laying at all.

> I had always thought they were virgins that never managed to mate.

That seems to be a common belief.

> I had envisioned Drone-layers as virgin queens that were prevented from successfully mating during the period when mating, for them, were a biological imperative. That they outgrew the urge to perform mating flights